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Merry Christmas, Happy Chanukah, Jolly Kwanza too,,,

I was hoping to get this winter themed post up weeks ago.Alas, this speech lady has been bogged down with evaluations, progress reports, IEP paperwork, Medicaid and all that “fun” stuff that we get paid overtime for (cough, cough not).Sorry to be a Scrooge, but had to get my “Ba Humbugs” out before I was able to talk about the festive activities that have been going on in speech therapy.

Christmas

Articulation

"Oh Christmas Tree"

We made Christmas trees out of articulation words that are winter themed. Colored the pictures green, added a star on top and these labels so parents knew what this activity was all about.

Ornaments

This activity may look familiar. I did something similiar in my Halloween post. I used a circle template and then had the kids fold the circles in half. Then, they glued one half of the circle and connected all of them except the last two. I use four circles for each ornament. Before you glue the last circles together use string and white glue to create something for the ornament to hang. Add articulation words to each side of the circle and you've got yourself a speech therapy ornament.

Language

Hot Chocolate

This was a great activity for beginning sequencers. They had to sequence how to make hot chocolate. First, I did a demonstration. Then, they completed their sequencing. After that, they had to follow their own directions to make their hot chocolate. Thank goodness it got cold in Texas or the hot chocolate wouldn't have been so warm and cozy!

Snowman Activity

This was also an activity from my Halloween post that worked out so well I decided to make it for the next season. Have the students follow or give the directions to another to make a snowman. Great for working on those quantity, quality and spatial concepts. Here is the template I used.

Social Story

Christmas time can be stressful, but it's also a great opportunity to work on those social skills that our kids with Autism need to work on. I have made a social story about receiving gifts. There is nothing I dislike more than when a child receives a gift and huffs and puffs because "That's not what I wanted!". So, to prevent this from happening here are two pages of a social story to read to your kids and send home with parents.

The Grinch is a great character to talk about expected and unexpected behaviors as well as describing words, antonyms, synonyms etc. Videos are a great interactive way to work on inferencing as well. I work closely with a teacher who uses it all the time and it inspired me to do a holiday version. Here and here are two links to Grinch videos.

﻿Chanukah:

Here is a great post by Jenna Rayburn that has activities for Chanukah.

Heidi Kay over at Pediastaff challenged some bloggers to create therapy activies related to Chanukah and Kwanza. While the activity I came up with is pretty simple in nature, it was a really great motivator. These chain links can be used in a couple different ways.

Articulation:

I introduced Kwanza to the kids first. I explained what the colors mean and the basic traditions of the holiday. Then, depending on what level they are at, they get to add a link for every sound or sound in a sentence that they produced correctly. I tried to keep the conversation centered around the holiday. Whoever has the longest chain at the end of the session gets an extra sticker.

Language:

Because many children at my school do not celebrate Kwanza or Chanukah, they don't know much about the holidays. I wrote on the white board "Holidays" and the kids had to either tell a personal story (they get a red link), ask a question (they get a green link) or comment on someone else's response (they get a black link). They want their links to be a mix of colors and not all one color. Whoever has the longest chain at the end of the session gets an extra sticker. It was a good way to work on pragmatics and other expressive language goals and get kids to talk about their holiday traditions and ask questions about others.

I hope everyone has a wonderful holiday season and enjoys spending quality time with family. I'm seriously looking forward to it and my goal is to be paperwork free by December 22nd! Happy Holidays!

2 comments:

Fantastic ideas!! I host a linky party designed to bring educators (like fellow SLPs, teachers, and homeschooling parents) and parents together to share free or virtually learning activities...fell free to stop by to get some inspiration and link up if you'd like! :)

I tried to download the Christmas pictures but wasn't able to :(. Both my computer at work and home computer said Windows didn't recognize the file. IS there any other format you can download it in??? I would love the pictures!! This activity looks so cute!

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About Me

I am currently a school-based and clinical speech pathologist in Chicago, IL. I love to create easy, adaptable, fun and functional therapy ideas to use in any setting. I appreciate your patronage to this site.
Email me with any thoughts or ideas: thespeechladyliz@gmail.com

Disclaimer

This website is a personal blog created by an ASHA certified Speech Language Pathologist. The ideas are meant to help your students or children increase speech and langauage skills. These products or ideas are not meant to replace an evaluation or treatment from a certified SLP. Please make sure to link back to this blog for any pictures or ideas that you may use. Thanks all for checking out Speech Lady Liz!